VIRGILS GNAT WE now have playde (Augustus) wantonly, | |
| Tuning our song unto a tender Muse, | |
| And like a cobweb weaving slenderly, | |
| Have onely playde: let thus much then excuse | |
| This Gnats small poeme, that th whole history | 5 |
| Is but a jest, though envie it abuse: | |
| But who such sports and sweet delights doth blame, | |
| Shall lighter seeme than this Gnats idle name. | |
| |
| Hereafter, when as season more secure | |
| Shall bring forth fruit, this Muse shall speak to thee | 10 |
| In bigger notes, that may thy sense allure, | |
| And for thy worth frame some fit poesie: | |
| The golden ofspring of Latona pure, | |
| And ornament of great Joves progenie, | |
| Phbus, shall be the author of my song, | 15 |
| Playing on yvorie harp with silver strong. | |
| |
| He shall inspire my verse with gentle mood, | |
| Of poets prince, whether he woon beside | |
| Faire Xanthus sprincled with Chimæras blood, | |
| Or in the woods of Astery abide, | 20 |
| Or whereas Mount Parnasse, the Muses brood, | |
| Doth his broad forhead like two hornes divide, | |
| And the sweete waves of sounding Castaly | |
| With liquid foote doth slide downe easily. | |
| |
| Wherefore ye sisters, which the glorie bee | 25 |
| Of the Pierian streames, fayre Naiades, | |
| Go too, and dauncing all in companie, | |
| Adorne that god: and thou holie Pales, | |
| To whome the honest care of husbandrie | |
| Returneth by continuall successe, | 30 |
| Have care for to pursue his footing light, | |
| Through the wide woods and groves with green leaves dight. | |
| |
| Professing thee I lifted am aloft | |
| Betwixt the forrest wide and starrie sky: | |
| And thou most dread (Octavius) which oft | 35 |
| To learned wits givest courage worthily, | |
| O come (thou sacred childe) come sliding soft, | |
| And favour my beginnings graciously: | |
| For not these leaves do sing that dreadfull stound, | |
| When giants bloud did staine Phlegræan ground; | 40 |
| |
| Nor how th halfe horsy people, Centaures hight, | |
| Fought with the bloudie Lapithaes at bord; | |
| Nor how the East with tyranous despight | |
| Burnt th Attick towres, and people slew with sword; | |
| Nor how Mount Athos through exceeding might | 45 |
| Was digged downe; nor yron bands abord | |
| The Pontick sea by their huge navy cast, | |
| My volume shall renowne, so long since past: | |
| |
| Nor Hellespont trampled with horses feete, | |
| When flocking Persians did the Greeks affray; | 50 |
| But my soft Muse, as for her power more meete, | |
| Delights (with Phbus friendly leave) to play | |
| An easie running verse with tender feete. | |
| And thou (dread sacred child) to thee alway | |
| Let everlasting lightsome glory strive, | 55 |
| Through the worlds endles ages to survive. | |
| |
| And let an happie roome remaine for thee | |
| Mongst heavenly ranks, where blessed soules do rest; | |
| And let long lasting life with joyous glee, | |
| As thy due meede that thou deservest best, | 60 |
| Hereafter many yeares remembred be | |
| Amongst good men, of whom thou oft are blest; | |
| Live thou for ever in all happinesse: | |
| But let us turne to our first businesse. | |
| |
| The fiery Sun was mounted now on hight | 65 |
| Up to the heavenly towers, and shot each where | |
| Out of his golden charet glistering light; | |
| And fayre Aurora with her rosie heare | |
| The hatefull darknes now had put to flight; | |
| When as the shepheard, seeing day appeare, | 70 |
| His little goats gan drive out of their stalls, | |
| To feede abroad, where pasture best befalls. | |
| |
| To an high mountaines top he with them went, | |
| Where thickest grasse did cloath the open hills: | |
| They, now amongst the woods and thickets ment, | 75 |
| Now in the valleies wandring at their wills, | |
| Spread themselves farre abroad through each descent; | |
| Some on the soft greene grasse feeding their fills; | |
| Some, clambring through the hollow cliffes on hy, | |
| Nibble the bushie shrubs, which growe thereby. | 80 |
| |
| Others the utmost boughs of trees doe crop, | |
| And brouze the woodbine twigges, that freshly bud; | |
| This with full bit doth catch the utmost top | |
| Of some soft willow, or new growen stud; | |
| This with sharpe teeth the bramble leaves doth lop, | 85 |
| And chaw the tender prickles in her cud; | |
| The whiles another high doth overlooke | |
| Her owne like image in a christall brooke. | |
| |
| O the great happines which shepheards have, | |
| Who so loathes not too much the poore estate | 90 |
| With minde that ill use doth before deprave, | |
| Ne measures all things by the costly rate | |
| Of riotise, and semblants outward brave! | |
| No such sad cares, as wont to macerate | |
| And rend the greedie mindes of covetous men, | 95 |
| Do ever creepe into the shepheards den. | |
| |
| Ne cares he if the fleece which him arayes | |
| Be not twice steeped in Assyrian dye; | |
| Ne glistering of golde, which underlayes | |
| The summer beames, doe blinde his gazing eye; | 100 |
| Ne pictures beautie, nor the glauncing rayes | |
| Of precious stones, whence no good commeth by; | |
| Ne yet his cup embost with imagery | |
| Of Bætus or of Alcons vanity. | |
| |
| Ne ought the whelky pearles esteemeth hee, | 105 |
| Which are from Indian seas brought far away: | |
| But with pure brest from carefull sorrow free, | |
| On the soft grasse his limbs doth oft display, | |
| In sweete spring time, when flowres varietie | |
| With sundrie colours paints the sprincled lay; | 110 |
| There, lying all at ease from guile or spight, | |
| With pype of fennie reedes doth him delight. | |
| |
| There he, lord of himselfe, with palme bedight, | |
| His looser locks doth wrap in wreath of vine: | |
| There his milk dropping goats be his delight, | 115 |
| And fruitefull Pales, and the forrest greene, | |
| And darkesome caves in pleasaunt vallies pight, | |
| Wheras continuall shade is to be seene, | |
| And where fresh springing wells, as christall neate, | |
| Do alwayes flow, to quench his thirstie heate. | 120 |
| |
| O who can lead then a more happie life | |
| Than he, that with cleane minde and heart sincere, | |
| No greedy riches knowes nor bloudie strife, | |
| No deadly fight of warlick fleete doth feare, | |
| Ne runs in perill of foes cruell knife, | 125 |
| That in the sacred temples he may reare | |
| A trophee of his glittering spoyles and treasure, | |
| Or may abound in riches above measure? | |
| |
| Of him his God is worshipt with his sythe, | |
| And not with skill of craftsman polished: | 130 |
| He joyes in groves, and makes himselfe full blythe | |
| With sundrie flowers in wilde fieldes gathered; | |
| Ne frankincens he from Panchæa buyth: | |
| Sweete Quiet harbours in his harmeles head, | |
| And perfect Pleasure buildes her joyous bowre, | 135 |
| Free from sad cares, that rich mens hearts devowre. | |
| |
| This all his care, this all his whole indevour, | |
| To this his minde and senses he doth bend, | |
| How he may flow in quiets matchles treasour, | |
| Content with any food that God doth send; | 140 |
| And how his limbs, resolvd through idle leisour | |
| Unto sweete sleepe he may securely lend, | |
| In some coole shadow from the scorching heat, | |
| The whiles his flock their chawed cuds do eate. | |
| |
| O flocks, O faunes, and O ye pleasaunt springs | 145 |
| Of Tempe, where the countrey nymphs are rife, | |
| Through whose not costly care each shepheard sings | |
| As merrie notes upon his rusticke fife | |
| As that Ascræan bard, whose fame now rings | |
| Through the wide world, and leads as joyfull life, | 150 |
| Free from all troubles and from worldly toyle, | |
| In which fond men doe all their dayes turmoyle. | |
| |
| In such delights whilst thus his carelesse time | |
| This shepheard drives, upleaning on his batt, | |
| And on shrill reedes chaunting his rustick rime, | 155 |
| Hyperion, throwing foorth his beames full hott, | |
| Into the highest top of heaven gan clime, | |
| And the world parting by an equall lott, | |
| Did shed his whirling flames on either side, | |
| As the great Ocean doth himselfe divide. | 160 |
| |
| Then gan the shepheard gather into one | |
| His stragling goates, and drave them to a foord, | |
| Whose cærule streame, rombling in pible stone, | |
| Crept under mosse as greene as any goord. | |
| Now had the sun halfe heaven overgone, | 165 |
| When he his heard back from that water foord | |
| Drave from the force of Phbus boyling ray, | |
| Into thick shadowes, there themselves to lay. | |
| |
| Soone as he them placd in thy sacred wood | |
| (O Delian goddesse) saw, to which of yore | 170 |
| Came the bad daughter of old Cadmus brood, | |
| Cruell Agave, flying vengeance sore | |
| Of King Nictileus for the guiltie blood | |
| Which she with cursed hands had shed before; | |
| There she halfe frantick having slaine her sonne, | 175 |
| Did shrowd her selfe like punishment to shonne. | |
| |
| Here also playing on the grassy greene, | |
| Woodgods, and satyres, and swift dryades, | |
| With many fairies oft were dauncing seene. | |
| Not so much did Dan Orpheus represse | 180 |
| The streames of Hebrus with his songs, I weene, | |
| As that faire troupe of woodie goddesses | |
| Staied thee (O Peneus) powring foorth to thee, | |
| From cheereful lookes, great mirth and gladsome glee. | |
| |
| The verie nature of the place, resounding | 185 |
| With gentle murmure of the breathing ayre, | |
| A pleasant bowre with all delight abounding | |
| In the fresh shadowe did for them prepayre, | |
| To rest their limbs with wearines redounding. | |
| For first the high palme trees, with braunches faire, | 190 |
| Out of the lowly vallies did arise, | |
| And high shoote up their heads into the skyes. | |
| |
| And them amongst the wicked lotos grew, | |
| Wicked, for holding guilefully away | |
| Ulysses men, whom rapt with sweetenes new, | 195 |
| Taking to hoste, it quite from him did stay; | |
| And eke those trees, in whose transformed hew | |
| The Sunnes sad daughters waylde the rash decay | |
| Of Phaeton, whose limbs with lightening rent | |
| They gathering up, with sweete teares did lament. | 200 |
| |
| And that same tree, in which Demophoon, | |
| By his disloyalty lamented sore, | |
| Eternall hurte left unto many one: | |
| Whom als accompanied the oke, of yore | |
| Through fatall charmes transformd to such an one: | 205 |
| The oke, whose acornes were our foode, before | |
| That Ceres seede of mortall men were knowne, | |
| Which first Triptoleme taught how to be sowne. | |
| |
| Here also grew the rougher rinded pine, | |
| The great Argoan ships brave ornament, | 210 |
| Whom golden fleece did make an heavenly signe; | |
| Which coveting, with his high tops extent, | |
| To make the mountaines touch the starres divine, | |
| Decks all the forrest with embellishment; | |
| And the blacke holme that loves the watrie vale; | 215 |
| And the sweete cypresse, signe of deadly bale. | |
| |
| Emongst the rest the clambring yvie grew, | |
| Knitting his wanton armes with grasping hold, | |
| Least that the poplar happely should rew | |
| Her brothers strokes, whose boughes she doth enfold | 220 |
| With her lythe twigs, till they the top survew, | |
| And paint with pallid greene her buds of gold. | |
| Next did the myrtle tree to her approach, | |
| Not yet unmindfull of her olde reproach. | |
| |
| But the small birds, in their wide boughs embowring, | 225 |
| Chaunted their sundrie tunes with sweete consent; | |
| And under them a silver spring, forth powring | |
| His trickling streames, a gentle murmure sent; | |
| Thereto the frogs, bred in the slimie scowring | |
| Of the moist moores, their jarring voyces bent; | 230 |
| And shrill grashoppers chirped them around: | |
| All which the ayrie echo did resound. | |
| |
| In this so pleasant place this shepheards flocke | |
| Lay everie where, their wearie limbs to rest, | |
| On everie bush, and everie hollow rocke, | 235 |
| Where breathe on them the whistling wind mote best; | |
| The whiles the shepheard self, tending his stocke, | |
| Sate by the fountaine side, in shade to rest, | |
| Where gentle slumbring sleep oppressed him, | |
| Displaid on ground, and seized everie lim. | 240 |
| |
| Of trecherie or traines nought tooke he keep, | |
| But, looslie on the grassie greene dispredd, | |
| His dearest life did trust to careles sleep; | |
| Which, weighing down his drouping drowsie hedd, | |
| In quiet rest his molten heart did steep, | 245 |
| Devoid of care, and feare of all falshedd: | |
| Had not inconstant Fortune, bent to ill, | |
| Bid strange mischance his quietnes to spill. | |
| |
| For at his wonted time in that same place | |
| An huge great serpent, all with speckles pide, | 250 |
| To drench himselfe in moorish slime did trace, | |
| There from the boyling heate himselfe to hide: | |
| He, passing by with rolling wreathed pace, | |
| With brandisht tongue the emptie aire did gride, | |
| And wrapt his scalie boughts with fell despight, | 255 |
| That all things seemd appalled at his sight. | |
| |
| Now more and more having himselfe enrolde, | |
| His glittering breast he lifteth up on hie, | |
| And with proud vaunt his head aloft doth holde; | |
| His creste above, spotted with purple die, | 260 |
| On everie side did shine like scalie golde, | |
| And his bright eyes, glauncing full dreadfullie, | |
| Did seeme to flame out flakes of flashing fyre, | |
| And with sterne lookes to threaten kindled yre. | |
| |
| Thus wise long time he did himselfe dispace | 265 |
| There round about, when as at last he spide, | |
| Lying along before him in that place, | |
| That flocks grand captaine and most trustie guide: | |
| Eftsoones more fierce in visage and in pace, | |
| Throwing his firie eyes on everie side, | 270 |
| He commeth on, and all things in his way | |
| Full stearnly rends, that might his passage stay. | |
| |
| Much he disdaines, that anie one should dare | |
| To come unto his haunt; for which intent | |
| He inly burns, and gins straight to prepare | 275 |
| The weapons which Nature to him hath lent; | |
| Fellie he hisseth, and doth fiercely stare, | |
| And hath his jawes with angrie spirits rent, | |
| That all his tract with bloudie drops is stained, | |
| And all his foldes are now in length outstrained. | 280 |
| |
| Whom, thus at point prepared, to prevent, | |
| A litle noursling of the humid ayre, | |
| A Gnat, unto the sleepie shepheard went, | |
| And marking where his ey-lids, twinckling rare, | |
| Shewd the two pearles which sight unto him lent, | 285 |
| Through their thin coverings appearing fayre, | |
| His little needle there infixing deep, | |
| Warnd him awake, from death himselfe to keep. | |
| |
| Wherewith enragd, he fiercely gan upstart, | |
| And with his hand him rashly bruzing, slewe, | 290 |
| As in avengement of his heedles smart, | |
| That streight the spirite out of his senses flew, | |
| And life out of his members did depart: | |
| When suddenly casting aside his vew, | |
| He spide his foe with felonous intent, | 295 |
| And fervent eyes to his destruction bent. | |
| |
| All suddenly dismaid, and hartles quight, | |
| He fled abacke, and, catching hastie holde | |
| Of a yong alder hard beside him pight, | |
| It rent, and streight about him gan beholde | 300 |
| What god or fortune would assist his might. | |
| But whether god or fortune made him bold | |
| Its hard to read: yet hardie will he had | |
| To overcome, that made him lesse adrad. | |
| |
| The scalie backe of that most hideous snake | 305 |
| Enwrapped round, oft faining to retire, | |
| And oft him to assaile, he fiercely strake | |
| Whereas his temples did his creast front tyre; | |
| And, for he was but slowe, did slowth off shake, | |
| And gazing ghastly on (for feare and yre | 310 |
| Had blent so much his sense, that lesse he feard;) | |
| Yet, when he saw him slaine, himselfe he cheard. | |
| |
| By this the Night forth from the darksome bowre | |
| Of Herebus her teemed steedes gan call, | |
| And laesie Vesper in his timely howre | 315 |
| From golden Oeta gan proceede withall; | |
| Whenas the shepheard after this sharpe stowre, | |
| Seing the doubled shadowes low to fall, | |
| Gathering his straying flocke, does homeward fare, | |
| And unto rest his wearie joynts prepare. | 320 |
| |
| Into whose sense so soone as lighter sleepe | |
| Was entered, and now loosing everie lim, | |
| Sweete slumbring deaw in carelesnesse did steepe, | |
| The image of that Gnat appeard to him, | |
| And in sad tearmes gan sorrowfully weepe, | 325 |
| With greislie countenaunce and visage grim, | |
| Wailing the wrong which he had done of late, | |
| In steed of good, hastning his cruell fate. | |
| |
| Said he, What have I, wretch, deservd, that thus | |
| Into this bitter bale I am outcast, | 330 |
| Whilest that thy life more deare and precious | |
| Was than mine owne, so long as it did last? | |
| I now, in lieu of paines so gracious, | |
| Am tost in th ayre with everie windie blast: | |
| Thou, safe delivered from sad decay, | 335 |
| Thy careles limbs in loose sleep dost display. | |
| |
| So livest thou; but my poore wretched ghost | |
| Is forst to ferrie over Lethes river, | |
| And, spoyld of Charon, too and fro am tost. | |
| Seest thou, how all places quake and quiver, | 340 |
| Lightned with deadly lamps on everie post? | |
| Tisiphone each where doth shake and shiver | |
| Her flaming fire brond, encountring me, | |
| Whose lockes uncombed cruell adders be. | |
| |
| And Cerberus, whose many mouthes doo bay, | 345 |
| And barke out flames, as if on fire he fed; | |
| Adowne whose necke, in terrible array, | |
| Ten thousand snakes, cralling about his hed, | |
| Doo hang in heapes, that horribly affray, | |
| And bloodie eyes doo glister firie red; | 350 |
| He oftentimes me dreadfullie doth threaten, | |
| With painfull torments to be sorely beaten. | |
| |
| Ay me! that thankes so much should faile of meed! | |
| For that I thee restord to life againe, | |
| Even from the doore of death and deadlie dreed. | 355 |
| Where then is now the guerdon of my paine? | |
| Where the reward of my so piteous deed? | |
| The praise of pitie vanisht is in vaine, | |
| And th antique faith of justice long agone | |
| Out of the land is fled away and gone. | 360 |
| |
| I saw anothers fate approaching fast, | |
| And left mine owne his safetie to tender; | |
| Into the same mishap I now am cast, | |
| And shund destruction doth destruction render: | |
| Not unto him that never hath trespast, | 365 |
| But punishment is due to the offender: | |
| Yet let destruction be the punishment, | |
| So long as thankfull will may it relent. | |
| |
| I carried am into waste wildernesse, | |
| Waste wildernes, amongst Cymerian shades, | 370 |
| Where endles paines and hideous heavinesse | |
| Is round about me heapt in darksome glades. | |
| For there huge Othos sits in sad distresse, | |
| Fast bound with serpents that him oft invades, | |
| Far of beholding Ephialtes tide, | 375 |
| Which once assaid to burne this world so wide. | |
| |
| And there is mournfull Tityus, mindefull yet | |
| Of thy displeasure, O Latona faire; | |
| Displeasure too implacable was it, | |
| That made him meat for wild foules of the ayre: | 380 |
| Much do I feare among such fiends to sit; | |
| Much do I feare back to them to repayre, | |
| To the black shadowes of the Stygian shore, | |
| Where wretched ghosts sit wailing evermore. | |
| |
| There next the utmost brinck doth he abide, | 385 |
| That did the bankets of the gods bewray, | |
| Whose throat, through thirst, to nought nigh being dride, | |
| His sense to seeke for ease turnes every way: | |
| And he that in avengement of his pride, | |
| For scorning to the sacred gods to pray, | 390 |
| Against a mountaine rolls a mightie stone, | |
| Calling in vaine for rest, and can have none. | |
| |
| Go ye with them, go, cursed damosells, | |
| Whose bridale torches foule Erynnis tynde, | |
| And Hymen, at your spousalls sad, foretells | 395 |
| Tydings of death and massacre unkinde: | |
| With them that cruell Colchid mother dwells, | |
| The which conceivd in her revengefull minde, | |
| With bitter woundes her owne deere babes to slay, | |
| And murdred troupes upon great heapes to lay. | 400 |
| |
| There also those two Pandionian maides, | |
| Calling on Itis, Itis evermore, | |
| Whom, wretched boy, they slew with guiltie blades; | |
| For whome the Thracian king lamenting sore, | |
| Turnd to a lapwing, fowlie them upbraydes, | 405 |
| And fluttering round about them still does sore; | |
| There now they all eternally complaine | |
| Of others wrong, and suffer endles paine. | |
| |
| But the two brethren borne of Cadmus blood, | |
| Whilst each does for the soveraignty contend, | 410 |
| Blinde through ambition, and with vengeance wood, | |
| Each doth against the others bodie bend | |
| His cursed steele, of neither well withstood, | |
| And with wide wounds their carcases doth rend; | |
| That yet they both doe mortall foes remaine, | 415 |
| Sith each with brothers bloudie hand was slaine. | |
| |
| Ah (waladay!) there is no end of paine, | |
| Nor chaunge of labour may intreated bee: | |
| Yet I beyond all these am carried faine, | |
| Where other powers farre different I see, | 420 |
| And must passe over to th Elisian plaine: | |
| There grim Persephone, encountring mee, | |
| Doth urge her fellow Furies earnestlie, | |
| With their bright firebronds me to terrifie. | |
| |
| There chast Alceste lives inviolate, | 425 |
| Free from all care, for that her husbands daies | |
| She did prolong by changing fate for fate: | |
| Lo! there lives also the immortall praise | |
| Of womankinde, most faithfull to her mate, | |
| Penelope; and from her farre awayes | 430 |
| A rulesse rout of youngmen, which her wood, | |
| All slaine with darts, lie wallowed in their blood. | |
| |
| And sad Eurydice thence now no more | |
| Must turne to life, but there detained bee, | |
| For looking back, being forbid before: | 435 |
| Yet was the guilt thereof, Orpheus, in thee. | |
| Bold sure he was, and worthie spirite bore, | |
| That durst those lowest shadowes goe to see, | |
| And could beleeve that anie thing could please | |
| Fell Cerberus, or Stygian powres appease. | 440 |
| |
| Ne feard the burning waves of Phlegeton, | |
| Nor those same mournfull kingdomes, compassed | |
| With rustie horrour and fowle fashion, | |
| And deep digd vawtes, and Tartar covered | |
| With bloodie night, and darke confusion, | 445 |
| And judgement seates, whose judge is deadlie dred, | |
| A judge that, after death, doth punish sore | |
| The faults which life hath trespassed before. | |
| |
| But valiant fortune made Dan Orpheus bolde: | |
| For the swift running rivers still did stand, | 450 |
| And the wilde beasts their furie did withhold, | |
| To follow Orpheus musicke through the land: | |
| And th okes, deep grounded in the earthly molde, | |
| Did move, as if they could him understand; | |
| And the shrill woods, which were of sense bereavd, | 455 |
| Through their hard barke his silver sound receavd. | |
| |
| And eke the Moone her hastie steedes did stay, | |
| Drawing in teemes along the starrie skie; | |
| And didst (O monthly virgin) thou delay | |
| Thy nightly course, to heare his melodie? | 460 |
| The same was able, with like lovely lay, | |
| The Queene of Hell to move as easily, | |
| To yeeld Eurydice unto her fere, | |
| Backe to be borne, though it unlawfull were. | |
| |
| She (ladie) having well before approoved, | 465 |
| The feends to be too cruell and severe, | |
| Observd th appointed way, as her behooved, | |
| Ne ever did her ey-sight turne arere, | |
| Ne ever spake, ne cause of speaking mooved: | |
| But cruell Orpheus, thou much crueller, | 470 |
| Seeking to kisse her, brokst the gods decree, | |
| And thereby madst her ever damnd to be. | |
| |
| Ah! but sweete love of pardon worthie is, | |
| And doth deserve to have small faults remitted; | |
| If Hell at least things lightly done amis | 475 |
| Knew how to pardon, when ought is omitted: | |
| Yet are ye both received into blis, | |
| And to the seates of happie soules admitted, | |
| And you beside the honourable band | |
| Of great heroës doo in order stand. | 480 |
| |
| There be the two stout sonnes of Aeacus, | |
| Fierce Peleus, and the hardie Telamon, | |
| Both seeming now full glad and joyeous | |
| Through their syres dreadfull jurisdiction, | |
| Being the judge of all that horrid hous: | 485 |
| And both of them, by strange occasion, | |
| Renownd in choyce of happie marriage | |
| Through Venus grace, and vertues cariage. | |
| |
| For th one was ravisht of his owne bondmaide, | |
| The faire Ixione, captivd from Troy; | 490 |
| But th other was with Thetis love assaid, | |
| Great Nereus his daughter and his joy. | |
| On this side them there is a youngman layd, | |
| Their match in glorie, mightie, fierce and coy, | |
| That from th Argolick ships, with furious yre, | 495 |
| Bett back the furie of the Trojan fyre. | |
| |
| O who would not recount the strong divorces | |
| Of that great warre, which Trojanes oft behelde, | |
| And oft beheld the warlike Greekish forces, | |
| When Teucrian soyle with bloodie rivers swelde, | 500 |
| And wide Sigæan shores were spred with corses, | |
| And Simois and Xanthus blood outwelde, | |
| Whilst Hector raged with outragious minde, | |
| Flames, weapons, wounds in Greeks fleete to have tynde? | |
| |
| For Ida selfe, in ayde of that fierce fight, | 505 |
| Out of her mountaines ministred supplies, | |
| And like a kindly nourse, did yeeld (for spight) | |
| Store of firebronds out of her nourseries | |
| Unto her foster children, that they might | |
| Inflame the navie of their enemies, | 510 |
| And all the Rhætean shore to ashes turne, | |
| Where lay the ships which they did seeke to burne. | |
| |
| Gainst which the noble sonne of Telamon | |
| Opposd himselfe, and thwarting his huge shield, | |
| Them battell bad; gainst whom appeard anon | 515 |
| Hector, the glorie of the Trojan field: | |
| Both fierce and furious in contention | |
| Encountred, that their mightie strokes so shrild | |
| As the great clap of thunder, which doth ryve | |
| The ratling heavens, and cloudes asunder dryve. | 520 |
| |
| So th one with fire and weapons did contend | |
| To cut the ships from turning home againe | |
| To Argos; th other strove for to defend | |
| The force of Vulcane with his might and maine. | |
| Thus th one Aeacide did his fame extend: | 525 |
| But th other joyd, that, on the Phrygian playne | |
| Having the blood of vanquisht Hector shedd, | |
| He compast Troy thrice with his bodie dedd. | |
| |
| Againe great dole on either partie grewe, | |
| That him to death unfaithfull Paris sent; | 530 |
| And also him that false Ulysses slewe, | |
| Drawne into danger through close ambushment: | |
| Therefore from him Laërtes sonne his vewe | |
| Doth turne aside, and boasts his good event | |
| In working of Strymonian Rhæsus fall, | 535 |
| And efte in Dolons slye surprysall. | |
| |
| Againe the dreadfull Cycones him dismay, | |
| And blacke Læstrigones, a people stout: | |
| Then greedie Scilla, under whom there bay | |
| Manie great bandogs, which her gird about: | 540 |
| Then doo the Aetnean Cyclops him affray, | |
| And deep Charybdis gulphing in and out: | |
| Lastly the squalid lakes of Tartarie, | |
| And griesly feends of hell him terrifie. | |
| |
| There also goodly Agamemnon bosts, | 545 |
| The glorie of the stock of Tantalus, | |
| And famous light of all the Greekish hosts, | |
| Under whose conduct most victorious, | |
| The Dorick flames consumd the Iliack posts. | |
| Ah! but the Greekes themselves more dolorous, | 550 |
| To thee, O Troy, paid penaunce for thy fall, | |
| In th Hellespont being nigh drowned all. | |
| |
| Well may appeare, by proofe of their mischaunce, | |
| The chaungfull turning of mens slipperie state, | |
| That none, whom fortune freely doth advaunce, | 555 |
| Himselfe therefore to heaven should elevate: | |
| For loftie type of honour, through the glaunce | |
| Of envies dart, is downe in dust prostrate; | |
| And all that vaunts in worldly vanitie | |
| Shall fall through fortunes mutabilitie. | 560 |
| |
| Th Argolicke power returning home againe, | |
| Enricht with spoyles of th Ericthonian towre, | |
| Did happie winde and weather entertaine, | |
| And with good speed the fomie billowes scowre: | |
| No signe of storme, no feare of future paine, | 565 |
| Which soone ensued them with heavie stowre. | |
| Nereïs to the seas a token gave, | |
| The whiles their crooked keeles the surges clave. | |
| |
| Suddenly, whether through the gods decree, | |
| Or haplesse rising of some froward starre, | 570 |
| The heavens on everie side enclowded bee: | |
| Black stormes and fogs are blowen up from farre, | |
| That now the pylote can no loadstarre see, | |
| But skies and seas doo make most dreadfull warre; | |
| The billowes striving to the heavens to reach, | 575 |
| And th heavens striving them for to impeach. | |
| |
| And, in avengement of their bold attempt, | |
| Both sun and starres and all the heavenly powres | |
| Conspire in one to wreake their rash contempt, | |
| And downe on them to fall from highest towres: | 580 |
| The skie, in pieces seeming to be rent, | |
| Throwes lightning forth, and haile, and harmful showres, | |
| That death on everie side to them appeares, | |
| In thousand formes, to worke more ghastly feares. | |
| |
| Some in the greedie flouds are sunke and drent; | 585 |
| Some on the rocks of Caphareus are throwne; | |
| Some on th Euboick cliffs in pieces rent; | |
| Some scattred on the Hercæan shores unknowne; | |
| And manie lost, of whom no moniment | |
| Remaines, nor memorie is to be showne: | 590 |
| Whilst all the purchase of the Phrigian pray, | |
| Tost on salt billowes, round about doth stray. | |
| |
| Here manie other like heroës bee, | |
| Equall in honour to the former crue, | |
| Whom ye in goodly seates may placed see, | 595 |
| Descended all from Rome by linage due, | |
| From Rome, that holds the world in sovereigntie, | |
| And doth all nations unto her subdue: | |
| Here Fabii and Decii doo dwell, | |
| Horatii that in vertue did excell. | 600 |
| |
| And here the antique fame of stout Camill | |
| Doth ever live; and constant Curtius, | |
| Who, stifly bent his vowed life to spill | |
| For countreyes health, a gulph most hideous | |
| Amidst the towne with his owne corps did fill, | 605 |
| T appease the powers; and prudent Mutius, | |
| Who in his flesh endurd the scorching flame, | |
| To daunt his foe by ensample of the same. | |
| |
| And here wise Curius, companion | |
| Of noble vertues, lives in endles rest; | 610 |
| And stout Flaminius, whose devotion | |
| Taught him the fires scornd furie to detest; | |
| And here the praise of either Scipion | |
| Abides in highest place above the best, | |
| To whom the ruind walls of Carthage vowd, | 615 |
| Trembling their forces, sound their praises lowd. | |
| |
| Live they for ever through their lasting praise: | |
| But I, poore wretch, am forced to retourne | |
| To the sad lakes, that Phbus sunnie rayes | |
| Doo never see, where soules doo alwaies mourne; | 620 |
| And by the wayling shores to waste my dayes, | |
| Where Phlegeton with quenchles flames doth burne; | |
| By which just Minos righteous soules doth sever | |
| From wicked ones, to live in blisse for ever. | |
| |
| Me therefore thus the cruell fiends of hell, | 625 |
| Girt with long snakes and thousand yron chaynes, | |
| Through doome of that their cruell judge, compell, | |
| With bitter torture and impatient paines, | |
| Cause of my death and just complaint to tell. | |
| For thou art he whom my poore ghost complaines | 630 |
| To be the author of her ill unwares, | |
| That careles hearst my intollerable cares. | |
| |
| Them therefore as bequeathing to the winde, | |
| I now depart, returning to thee never, | |
| And leave this lamentable plaint behinde. | 635 |
| But doo thou haunt the soft downe rolling river, | |
| And wilde greene woods, and fruitful pastures minde, | |
| And let the flitting aire my vaine words sever. | |
| Thus having said, he heavily departed | |
| With piteous crie, that anie would have smarted. | 640 |
| |
| Now, when the sloathfull fit of lifes sweete rest | |
| Had left the heavie shepheard, wondrous cares | |
| His inly grieved minde full sore opprest; | |
| That balefull sorrow he no longer beares | |
| For that Gnats death, which deeply was imprest, | 645 |
| But bends what ever power his aged yeares | |
| Him lent, yet being such as through their might | |
| He lately slue his dreadfull foe in fight. | |
| |
| By that same river lurking under greene, | |
| Eftsoones he gins to fashion forth a place, | 650 |
| And squaring it in compasse well beseene, | |
| There plotteth out a tombe by measured space: | |
| His yron headed spade tho making cleene, | |
| To dig up sods out of the flowrie grasse, | |
| His worke he shortly to good purpose brought, | 655 |
| Like as he had conceivd it in his thought. | |
| |
| An heape of earth he hoorded up on hie, | |
| Enclosing it with banks on everie side, | |
| And thereupon did raise full busily | |
| A little mount, of greene turffs edifide; | 660 |
| And on the top of all, that passers by | |
| Might it behold, the toomb he did provide | |
| Of smoothest marble stone in order set, | |
| That never might his luckie scape forget. | |
| |
| And round about he taught sweete flowres to growe, | 665 |
| The rose engrained in pure scarlet die, | |
| The lilly fresh, and violet belowe, | |
| The marigolde, and cherefull rosemarie, | |
| The Spartan mirtle, whence sweet guml does flowe, | |
| The purple hyacinthe, and fresh cost-marie, | 670 |
| And saffron, sought for in Cilician soyle, | |
| And lawrell, th ornament of Phbus toyle: | |
| |
| Fresh rhododaphne, and the Sabine flowre, | |
| Matching the wealth of th auncient frank-incence, | |
| And pallid yvie, building his owne bowre, | 675 |
| And box, yet mindfull of his olde offence, | |
| Red amaranthus, lucklesse paramour, | |
| Oxeye still greene, and bitter patience; | |
| Ne wants there pale Narcisse, that, in a well | |
| Seeing his beautie, in love with it fell. | 680 |
| |
| And whatsoever other flowre of worth, | |
| And whatso other hearb of lovely hew | |
| The joyous Spring out of the ground brings forth, | |
| To cloath her selfe in colours fresh and new, | |
| He planted there, and reard a mount of earth, | 685 |
| In whose high front was writ as doth ensue: | |
| |
| To thee, small Gnat, in lieu of his life saved, | |
The Shepheard hath thy deaths record engraved.
FINIS. | |
| |